Working Paper

Global Demographic Change and Climate Policies

Reyer Gerlagh, Richard Jaimes, Ali Motavasseli
CESifo, Munich, 2017

CESifo Working Paper No. 6617

Between 1950 and 2017, world average life expectancy increased from below-50 to above-70, while the fertility rate dropped from 5 to about 2.5. We develop and calibrate an analytic climate-economy model with overlapping generations to study the effect of such demographic change on capital markets and optimal climate policies. Our model replicates findings from the OLG-demography literature, such as a rise in households’ savings, and a declining rate of return to capital. We also find that demographic change raises the social cost of carbon, at 2020, from 28 euro/tCO2 in a model that abstracts from demography, to 94 euro/tCO2 in our calibrated model.

CESifo Category
Energy and Climate Economics
Resources and Environment
Keywords: climate change, social cost of carbon, environmental policy, demographic trends
JEL Classification: H230, J110, Q540, Q580